The last Queen of Italy, Marie-José of Belgium, looking out over the Landesgemeinde in Glarus, 1949.
Photopress-Archiv / Eugen Suter
The UK's Queen Elizabeth II met by jubilant faces in Geneva, 1980.
Photopress-Archiv
Queen Juliana from the Netherlands enjoying some Swiss snow in 1948, shortly before her coronation. Juliana had also spent childhood ski holidays in Zermatt.
Jeann Pierre Grisel / RDB
Prince Charles and Princess Diana on a ski holiday in Klosters, 1996. They would be divorced the same year.
Keystone
The final stroll of Empress Elisabeth – or “Sissi” – of Austria on September 10, 1898 in Geneva. She would be killed in an attack later that day.
BA-ARCHIV
Japanese Emperor Hirohito and Empress Kojun in the garden of the Hotel Beau-Rivage, Lausanne, 1971.
Photopress-Archiv
Maria de las Mercedes and her husband Don Juan de Borbon of the Spanish royal house, together with the Italian duchess Mancini, observing a horse race in Gstaad, 1943.
Keystone / Walter Henggeler
Japanese Crown Prince Akihito visiting the Jungfraujoch in 1953.
Photopress-Archiv
King Saud of Saudi Arabia and his entourage, enjoying the Knie circus, in 1959.
RDB
The Egyptian royal family, ice-skating in Switzerland, around 1935.
Imagno / Austrian Archives
Prince Rainer of Monaco with wife Princess Grace and their children Albert and Caroline, around 1963.
Pictorial Press Ltd
Shah Reza Pahlavi of Persia and Farah Diba with their children in St Moritz, 1967.
Rue Des Archives
Thai King Ananda Mahidol lived a short life, much of it in Switzerland – here he is pictured in the 1930s.
Photopress-Archiv
Visiting the 1928 Winter Olympics in St Moritz: Indian Princes Masir and Mumtaz Ali Khan with the dancer Maddy Encla.
Akg-images
The last Emperor of Abyssinia Haile Selassie I, born under the name Tafari Makonnen, in Switzerland in 1965.
Keystone
The Belgian royal family, including King Leopold III, in October 1945 in Pregny.
Akg-images / Germaineimage / Germaineimage
Swiss president Ludwig Forrer (wearing the top hat) with the German Kaiser Wilhelm II, during a state visit of the latter to Bern, September 1912.
Photopress-Archiv
Prince Michael, who would become King of Romania in 1927, with his mother Helena, Princess of Greece and Denmark, in 1925 in Aubonne.
Akg-images
Queen Astrid and King Leopold of Belgium during a ski holiday in St Moritz in 1935. Later that year, a car accident in Küssnacht am Rigi would cost Astrid her life.
Keystone / Iba-archiv
Austrian actor Josef Kainz with Ludwig II, the King of Bavaria, during a trip to Switzerland in 1881.
Süddeutsche Zeitung Photo / Scherl
Despite its republican tradition, Switzerland has always welcomed royalty from all over the world. Elisabeth of Austria, Napoleon III, Victoria, Kaiser Wilhelm II, the Egyptian royals, the last Emperor of Abyssinia – various kings and queens have visited the Alpine land over the years.
In 1939, for the National Exposition, the Swiss artist, Hans Erni, painted a fresco depicting “schwingen” wrestling, yodelling, and cheesemaking as a nod to almost every Swiss cliché. The title of the work read like a promise: “Switzerland – the people’s holiday destination”.
A more apt title might have been : “Switzerland – the holiday destination of kings and queens”. For most of the world’s “peoples” Switzerland was, and remains, beyond the average budget.
One of the first royal trendsetters was Queen Victoria, whose stint in Switzerland in 1868 sparked a subsequent boom in tourism. The Queen herself in fact had planned to come incognito, under the name of the “Duchess of Kent”, but when she arrived on the Rigi mountain, she was greeted with the refrains of “God save the Queen”.
Steamboats, hotels, and squares in Swiss towns would be later be named after Victoria.
More
More
How Queen Victoria transformed the Swiss tourism industry
This content was published on
Exactly 150 years ago, Queen Victoria and a small entourage headed to central Switzerland for a five-week getaway.
Aristocratic tourists have always been greeted cordially, to say the least. When Emperor Haile Selassie I of Ethiopia arrived in Bern 70 years ago, 100,000 people lined the streets to welcome him. Children had the day off school, so that they could wave the emperor along with flags. Selassie, however, was less interested in the tourism than he was in finalising some arms deals.
When the much-loved Queen Astrid of Belgium died in a car accident in central Switzerland in 1935, the interest of the worldwide media was so strong that Swissair risked its first ever night-flight from Zurich to London to deliver the Associated Press photos. To commemorate the Queen, an “Astrid Chapel” was then built at the site of the accident. Visitors to the chapel arrived in such great numbers that the building later had to be moved to make space for the traffic.
Sometimes monarchs brought money in with them. Ten years ago, Spanish king Juan Carlos – today faced with accusations of tax evasion – was welcomed by the Swiss government, who lined up in the pouring rain for the King. The visit was live-streamed on national TV.
More
More
How to welcome an emperor
This content was published on
An exhibit at Jegenstorf Castle, where the guest of honour stayed during his state visit, looks back on the big event of 1954 when the exotic ruler greeted those paying homage to him from a horse-drawn carriage and schoolchildren got the day off to wave flags along the route. There were other political motives behind…
Pia Schubiger, a historian and curator at the “Forum Schweizer Geschichte Schwyz”, which is hosting the exhibition “The Royals are coming” says that the “incredible soft spot [of the Swiss] for monarchs might seem like a paradox. But the less a society has itself experienced royalty, then the more it can be interested or moved by the charm and glamour of a queen or king”.
If you want to start a conversation about a topic raised in this article or want to report factual errors, email us at english@swissinfo.ch.
Read more
More
The new Thai king’s Swiss childhood
This content was published on
In 1960 and 1961, Thailand’s new king lived with his parents and sisters in Switzerland, on the shores of Lake Geneva, as old photos show.
Four reasons why the King of Bahrain is in Switzerland
This content was published on
The King of Bahrain Hamad bin Isa Al Khalifa’s official visit to Switzerland on Thursday is the first ever by a Bahraini King.
You can find an overview of ongoing debates with our journalists here . Please join us!
If you want to start a conversation about a topic raised in this article or want to report factual errors, email us at english@swissinfo.ch.